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World's Largest Biometric Database

An anonymous reader writes "In the last two years, over 200 million Indian nationals have had their fingerprints and photographs taken and irises scanned, and given a unique 12-digit number that should identify them everywhere and to everyone. This is only the beginning, and the goal is to do the same with the entire population (1.2 billion), so that poorer Indians can finally prove their existence and identity when needed for getting documents, getting help from the government, and opening bank and other accounts. This immense task needs a database that can contain over 12 billion fingerprints, 1.2 billion photographs, and 2.4 billion iris scans, can be queried from diverse devices connected to the Internet, and can return accurate results in an extremely short time."

3 of 117 comments (clear)

  1. Re:On the plus side... by Nadaka · · Score: 1, Funny

    Or worse, Kentucky.

    Imagine how frustrating it will be for those indians as they listen to barely literate hillfolk stutter out stilted strongly accented hindi read from cue cards.

  2. Re:And people in the US bitch about a national ID by characterZer0 · · Score: 3, Funny

    The federal government is granted no power over such things by the US Constitution.

    When has that ever stopped them before?

    --
    Go green: turn off your refrigerator.
  3. Re:No Electrophoreses? by gman003 · · Score: 3, Funny

    But what if you change your mind?